Answer:
Explanation: i’n my opinion it would be the solution it makes more since
The best and most correct answer among the choices provided by the question is the first choice "as an adverb prepositional phrase"
Adjective prepositional phrases<span> follow the nouns they modify, unlike adjectives which generally go immediately before the nouns they modify.</span>
I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
Mrs Mallard is beginning to recognise and accept the positive that emerges from her husband’s death, being her newfound freedom. Tentative words such as ‘little’, ‘whispered’ and ‘breath’ convey her disbelief but could also reveal the moral conflict within the realisation to the reader. The repetition of ‘free’ is singsong-like as if to portray a vital moment of self-actualisation.
You could also analyse the contrast in ‘little whispered’ and the way she uses exclamation points in ‘free!’, etc
Not sure how detailed I was meant to go. Hope this helps hey x
A noun that completes an action is called an object.
It is also a noun expression which is modified through the activity of a verb or practically supports a preposition.
Music is like my best friend
He is always there for me
He is there until the end
He is there when I'm in need
He knows just what to say, and
Music clams me down, always
He says “Please just grab my hand,
And we'll just listen today.”
Music is like my best friend
He takes my worries away
I'll love him until the end
Music is here everyday
I tried lol I hope this helps